Here’s an English version you can copy‑paste to Facebook. I kept the tonu and kavramsal derinliği:
⚡ THE BIO‑ELECTRICAL TRAP: Energy Drinks, Static Electricity and Shopping Frenzy!
Have you ever wondered why, in some big malls, schools or modern buildings, you keep touching things and getting “ZAP” shocks? Or why, after drinking an energy drink, you suddenly find yourself buying things you didn’t plan to buy?
I don’t see this as a coincidence, but as a hypothesis worth discussing:
We may be caught in a bio‑physical loop that turns us into “consumption batteries.” 🛒⚡
🧬 1. Your Body Charges Up Like a Capacitor
In closed, air‑conditioned, synthetic‑floored, metal‑railing buildings:
- Synthetic floors + dry air + plastic/metal clothing = static electricity build‑up
- Metal railings, door handles, escalators = discharge points
If grounding is not well designed or not working effectively in practice, your body accumulates static charge; each touch creates a small “zap” discharge. This leads to a subtle but constant micro‑stimulation and tension in the nervous system.
🥤 2. Energy Drinks: The System’s “Conductive” Fuel
Products like Coca‑Cola Energy don’t just deliver caffeine; with sugar, caffeine, taurine and some ions, they stimulate the nervous system and increase arousal and circulation.
What does this mean?
- Your body is more “on alert,”
- Your nervous system is more excitable,
- You become a more sensitive “receiving antenna” for external electrical/mechanical noise.
So a body already pushed into a yang state chemically, when combined with the electro‑climate of a mall, becomes a high‑voltage but fragile system.
🔊 3. The 10 Hz Hum: Weakening of Cognitive Filters
Large ventilation systems, machines and fans can emit low‑frequency hums that your ears barely notice but your body feels.
My hypothesis:
- Low‑frequency vibrations around 10 Hz keep the body in a state of mild constant stress and fatigue.
- A brain that is wired on energy drinks and sleep deprivation can slip into a “half‑trance, half‑alert” mode in this environment.
- The analytical filter that asks “Do I really need this?” (prefrontal cortex) slows down, while the impulsive “Just buy it, think later” part steps forward.
This is why some people leave a mall saying:
“I don’t know what I bought or how I spent so much.”
🤝 4. The “Unwritten Rule” Among Technical Staff
There is also a human relations and “unwritten rule” dimension.
The official side:
- Company policies, campaigns, promotion plans.
The unofficial side:
- Fridges, stands and “promo units” given to retailers,
- Technicians saying “Look, we brought you a fridge, here’s some free promotional stuff,”
- And around all this, an unwritten rule / tacit agreement that quietly forms.
In this atmosphere:
Almost nobody really questions the bio‑electrical impact of that fridge, stand or device (grounding quality, leakage, noise);
the main focus is visibility and sales.
We don’t have proof to claim “they deliberately design it to electrically stress people,”
but the priority of sales over human bio‑comfort suggests that electro‑climate is often treated as a secondary issue.
📉 5. The Loop: Static Build‑Up → Unease → Dopamine → Shopping
Putting this together, we get a loop:
1️⃣ Use energy drinks / caffeine to chemically push the nervous system into a yang mode.
2️⃣ Walk around in a mall with questionable grounding, high static charge, and low‑frequency hum.
3️⃣ As your body fills with static and EM load, unease, inner tension and fatigue increase.
4️⃣ Your brain tries to relieve this by seeking dopamine: buying something, consuming sugar/sweet drinks, chasing discounts.
5️⃣ The sense of relief is often more about discharging electrical and emotional tension than about the product itself.
In other words: consumption becomes not only economic, but also a bio‑electrical discharge mechanism.
I call this the “Bio‑Electromagnetic Consumption Hypothesis.”
🔍 6. Is This a Conspiracy or a Blind Spot?
There are two different questions here:
- Technically: Are static and electrical field conditions in malls really being measured and optimized?
- Ethically: Is human bio‑electricity and neuropsychology being treated as secondary compared to sales goals?
It’s important to be precise:
- We don’t have direct proof to claim “grounding is intentionally sabotaged to charge people.”
- But we do see strong signs that human bio‑physics is not taken seriously enough in architectural/technical design.
My claim is this:
We are moving beyond classic “neuromarketing”:
Human bio‑electricity is quietly becoming part of the marketing ecosystem, alongside the human brain.
🌍 7. What Can We Do?
This picture doesn’t have to be purely dark. Some practical steps:
- Use energy drinks and caffeine consciously (especially in time windows that combine with mall/online shopping).
- Limit the time you spend in heavy mall environments; step outside and touch real ground when possible.
- Seek grounding where you can (barefoot on earth/grass, antistatic tools at home/work, breath and body awareness practices).
- Ask yourself:
“Do I really want this product, or am I just trying to silence my inner electrical/emotional tension?”
🗣 Your Turn
I’m putting this forward as the Bio‑Electromagnetic Consumption Hypothesis.
It’s not a final verdict, it’s an invitation to think and discuss.
- Have you experienced static shocks in malls, schools or workplaces?
- How do you feel when you leave those places: refreshed or drained?
- Do you notice any change in your shopping behaviour on days when you’ve had energy drinks / high caffeine?
If you’d like, share your own “grounding stories” and shock experiences in the comments. ⚡
Bir yanıt yazın